Garcia v. United States

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJune 27, 2023
Docket3:18-cv-00176
StatusUnknown

This text of Garcia v. United States (Garcia v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garcia v. United States, (D. Or. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON

ISRAEL GARCIA, JR., No. 3:18-cv-00176-HZ

Plaintiff, FINDINGS OF FACT & CONCLUSIONS OF LAW v.

The UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Defendant.

John D. Burgess Law Offices of Daniel Snyder 1000 SW Broadway, Suite 2400 Portland, OR 97205

Attorney for Plaintiff

Austin Rice-Stitt United States Attorney’s Office District of Oregon 1000 SW Third Avenue, Suite 600 Portland, Oregon 97204

Danielle Rogowski DOJ-Bop Federal Bureau of Prisons FDC SeaTac P.O. Box 13901 SeaTac, WA 98198

Attorneys for Defendant HERNÁNDEZ, District Judge: This case involves the medical care Plaintiff Israel Garcia, Jr. received while incarcerated at Federal Correctional Institution (“FCI”) Sheridan. Plaintiff brings a claim for medical negligence against Defendant the United States of America under the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”). Plaintiff alleges that medical staff at FCI Sheridan failed to properly evaluate him when he sought care for severe abdominal pain in December 2015. According to Plaintiff’s claim, the medical staff’s negligence caused him to require a complicated surgery for a ruptured appendix in November 2016 when he was housed at FCI Talladega. Plaintiff alleges that due to Defendant’s failure to diagnosis his condition, he suffered excruciating, experienced a severe

infection and ICU stay, and has ongoing pain and discomfort from of an incisional hernia. The Court conducted a two-day bench trial on May 31 and June 1, 2023. The following are the Court’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law from that trial. See Fed R. Civ. P. 52(a). As explained below, the Court finds for Defendant on Plaintiff’s medical negligence claim. FINDINGS OF FACT Plaintiff was incarcerated at FCI Sheridan in Oregon from December 18, 2013, until he was transferred to FCI Talladega in Alabama on April 15, 2016. In December 2015, Plaintiff was housed in the special housing unit (“SHU”) at FCI Sheridan. Around 4 AM on December 19, 2015, Plaintiff experienced sudden onset of severe abdominal pain. He asked a prison officer to

call medical staff. Plaintiff was seen by a registered nurse, Kristina Behrens, in the SHU medical office at 10:12 AM that day. Nurse Behrens found that Plaintiff had “umbilical and suprapubic abdominal discomfort.” Ex. 1 at 61. Plaintiff reported two episodes of vomiting and a normal bowel movement. Id. He did not have right-sided abdominal pain. Id. He had a temperature of 100.8 degrees Fahrenheit and a heartrate of 101 beats per minute. Id. He rated his pain as eight out of ten. Id. Nurse Behrens noted Plaintiff’s pain to be exacerbated by sudden movements and relieved by lying down. Id. Nurse Behrens performed a physical examination. She noted that Plaintiff appeared to be in pain but was not “writhing in pain.” Id. at 62. He was not pale or diaphoretic. Id. His abdomen

had normal bowel sounds and was soft to palpation with no rigidity, rebound tenderness, or right lower quadrant tenderness. Id. He had midline abdominal tenderness and suprapubic tenderness. Id. A urine dipstick test showed trace blood and no other abnormalities. Id. Nurse Behrens testified that nothing reported in her clinical encounter note on that day indicated an emergency. She noted that Plaintiff’s physical exam did not suggest appendicitis because he had midline rather than right lower quadrant tenderness and had no rebound tenderness. After performing the physical examination, Nurse Behrens called the on-call nurse practitioner and relayed Plaintiff’s subjective findings, vital signs, and physical exam findings. The nurse practitioner instructed Nurse Behrens to give Plaintiff medication for pain and nausea.

Following the nurse practitioner’s order, Nurse Behrens gave Plaintiff intramuscular injections of ketorolac and promethazine. Id. at 63. Plaintiff was instructed to rest and drink water and to “notify medical if his current condition worsens.” Id. Nurse Behrens clinical encounter note was cosigned by Dr. Andrew Grasley, M.D. on December 21, 2015. Id. at 65. Nurse Behrens saw Plaintiff again at the SHU medical office at 10:17 AM on December 20, 2015. Id. at 66. She reported in her clinical encounter note that Plaintiff’s abdominal pain returned around 3 AM that morning. Id. When she first saw him that day, Plaintiff reported the pain to be in the right upper quadrant. Id. Later in the assessment, he reported the pain to be more in the right lower quadrant. Id. According to Nurse Behrens’s clinical encounter note, Plaintiff had no nausea or vomiting, reported having a normal bowel movement, and rated his pain as six out of ten. Id. On that visit, Plaintiff had a temperature of 99.1 degrees Fahrenheit, had a heart rate of 90 beats per minute, and did not appear to be in pain. On physical examination, Nurse Behrens noted right lower quadrant tenderness but no rebound tenderness, guarding, rigidity, or Rovsing’s sign,1 which could indicate appendicitis if present. Id.

Nurse Behrens again consulted the nurse practitioner by phone, who gave a verbal order for ketorolac for pain. Id. at 68. Nurse Behrens gave Plaintiff an intramuscular injection of that medication. Id. No lab tests or scans were ordered at that time. Plaintiff was again instructed to report any changes in his symptoms. Id. The December 20, 2015 clinical encounter note was cosigned by Dr. Grasley on December 21, 2015. Id. at 69. Plaintiff’s testimony about the December 20, 2015 visit conflicts with the medical record in some respects. Plaintiff testified that he told a prison officer that his pain was worse than the day before rather than better. He testified that Nurse Behrens saw him in the hallway outside his cell rather than in the SHU medical office and that she gave him two shots while his hands were

cuffed behind his back. Nurse Behrens testified that she must have examined Plaintiff in the SHU medical office because vital signs could only be taken using a “vital signs tower” located in the exam room. Tr. 188:17-21. Nurse Behrens also testified that she would never give injections of medications to people in handcuffs because it is not a safe practice. Plaintiff testified that he continued to have pain that waxed and waned over the next five months. He did not ask to be seen by medical staff during that time. Plaintiff testified that he did

1 Rovsing’s sign is elicited when a medical provider puts pressure on the left side of the abdomen and the patient feels pain on the right side. Tr. 182:1-4. not make any further complaints or requests to be seen because medical staff had already told him nothing was wrong. Plaintiff was transferred from FCI Sheridan to FCI Talladega in Alabama in April 2016. On May 16, 2016, he had a health screen visit with Nurse Schaefer at FCI Talladega. Ex. 508. According to the encounter note, Plaintiff had no fever, weight loss, or “painful condition” at that

time. Id. The note shows that he was taking no medications. Id. Plaintiff testified that he had pain on that day, but he did not report the pain because it was less than eight out of ten and not severe. Plaintiff did not complain or seek medical attention for the next five months. He testified that he suffered pain during that time but the pain was bearable. On the morning of November 15, 2016, Plaintiff initiated a medical visit at FCI Talladega. Ex. 1 at 86. Plaintiff reported that he had right upper abdominal pain with constipation but without nausea or vomiting. Id. Plaintiff reported to medical staff that he had experienced this type of abdominal pain before but it had improved on its own. Id. at 87. Plaintiff continued to have abdominal pain and was diagnosed with “appendicitis and localized

perforation with abscess formation” on November 22, 2016. Ex. 3 at 25.

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